35 Burst results for "OLI"

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"So most of the patients that we have in the gems clinic actually know their gender, usually around the age of puberty, but a good portion of children do know as early as seemingly from the womb. And they will usually express their gender identity as very young children, some as soon as they can talk. They might say phrases such as I'm a girl or I'm a boy or I'm going to be a woman or I'm going to be a mom. Kids know very, very early. So in the gems clinic we see a variety of young children all the way down to ages two and three and usually up to the ages of 9. There is no evidence for any of this. This is wizard wizardry. This is like voodoo stuff. Ali, how should we treat? An 11 year old that might be saying, maybe I think I'm a girl. I saw something on TikTok. Okay, go see the doctor. What should the treatment process be? Well, firstly, we have to look at the factors that influence these kids to feel like this, you know, one of the causes can be severe bullying and kids want to fit in these days. So if you have a class with 5 transgender students, their friends are going to want to be transgender. We saw that with Missouri with the whistleblower and some leaked emails that groups of girls from the same class in the same schools were being referred. So it's going to fit into school so they're falling for these social pressures. We also need to look at other factors that many of these kids being diagnosed with gender dysphoria have other medical or mental health conditions. So we should be treating that instead and not automatically saying this child should transition. And you know, it's very normal for a teenager, they're going through puberty to question themselves totally normal. And you know, Charlie, 15, 20 years ago, 20 years ago, we didn't have this in schools kids. You know, a girl might play with boys toys, whatever. Nobody could. And nobody questioned it. So, you know, this push that we have right now, it's harmful, and we need to stop the teachers teaching this. We need to stop drag shows, pushing these ideas on kids. And we need to stop this push from the medical industry to transition kids, you know? Would you say that an appropriate level of care should be how it was 20 years ago, you address it, you get some counseling. You might maybe talk about the underlying issues like, hey, maybe your father's not around or your mom might be a little kind of off the rails or distracted and you have some therapy and say, hey, you know, you're 11 years old, all of a sudden you're going through puberty. You got some raging hormones. You know, you're going to develop into somebody beautiful and different. But surgically going after yourself is actually really harsh and let's not do that. I mean, that's how a rational country would handle this, right? Right. I mean, you don't see cases of transgender kids in China, do you? I've never seen a case I've spent a lot of time in China, never seen a single case of that. So it's certainly something that's being pushed particularly in America and some European countries. Again, we need to look at underlying reasons they might have other issues that they're struggling with and give them counseling or therapy and just tell them that, you know, it's a phase they're a teenager. This is totally normal. You know, we all go for a phase as a teenager. Some people want to be a goth. Some people are emo, but it doesn't mean you should be medically transitioning. I mean, that's just crazy. We don't see that in China. We don't see that in African countries. We don't see that at all. It's really a push, so parents need to be looking at the teachers at the schools that awoke that and what they're watching on TikTok because that's what's really behind us. You know, these kids wouldn't even think about these things unless they're being influenced by outside sources. So the last question I have for you and check out Ali's book detransition. What do you have to say to people that are getting ridiculed, targeted, smeared, slandered for speaking out against us? Well, absolutely. We're seeing that J. K. Rowling spoke out for women. She has been vilified ever since. You know, even by the people that she made famous like Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, you know, and I just think, what a disrespect to J. K. Rowling. And you know, in other cases, anyone that speaks out, particularly detransition, as we've seen Chloe Cole, you know, she's subject to daily death threats. She has a radical trans activist turn up when she's doing a speech and they all abuse at her, you know, we can not let these people win. These people are aggressive. They hate freedom of speech, they hate America. They want to transition children. So we need to continue pushing to protect children. We're seeing 7 states have now banned gender affirming care in miners. We need to see many more states do this. And you know, put pressure on these trans activations. No, I call them out all the time. I'm not afraid of these tremendous activists. They're sending me death threats. They're calling for me to be publicly executions going to death. I don't care. I'm going to keep speaking up. And I think everyone should not be afraid to speak up because we can eventually be defeat these people. And there are minority of people less than 1%. So why is the majority caving into 1% of the world? I mean, look, here's why. And J. K. Rowling's super rich and she doesn't care. God bless her. Even though she's a liberal, vox dot com, J. K. Rowling's transphobia, a history. That's what they do to you. These very evil people, Ali, God bless you. I'm glad you found the lord, keep diving deep into the scriptures, and I hope to have you on soon and meet you. Thank you for your courage. Thanks, Charlie. I appreciate it, God bless you, too. Thanks so much for listening, everybody, email me your thoughts is always freedom at Charlie Kirk dot com. Thanks so much for listening and God bless. For more, on many of these stories and news you can trust. Go to Charlie Kirk dot com..

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"And their parenting out of fear too. Play cut 31. Again, if you have not seen Matt Walsh's film, what is a woman? It is one of the most persuasive films I have ever seen on any topic, let alone this idea, social contagion, Matt did an unbelievable job. Play cut 31. Have you ever met a four year old who believes in Santa Claus? Mmm um. So this is someone who believes that. Well, fat man is traveling through the sky on a flying reindeer at lightning speed, coming down his chimney with presents. Yeah. Would you say that this is someone who maybe has a tenuous grasp on reality? They have an appropriate four year old handle on the reality. Agreed. That's very real for them. Agreed. Agreed. But Santa Claus is real for them, but Santa Claus is not actually real. Yeah, well, but Santa Claus does deliver their Christmas presents. Well, yeah, but he's not real, though. To that child, they are. Ali, your thoughts. Well, firstly, you can see that lady, she's got that passive aggressive smile, which you see all too often with these people trying to push the transition children. I mean, you can see that in her face. And she really believes what she's doing transitioning children is totally okay. And I think that was a great analogy. You know, Santa Claus isn't real, but kids think it's real. But the same with gender, you know, kids might be pushed that they can change their gender, doesn't mean they should. And that really is an interesting thing. So I can connect two parts. So you have found God and praise God for that and you found Jesus, which is a belief in objective truth, right? Is a belief in a transcendent order, but for her this criminal Doctor Who calls herself a pediatrician in Boston, she says that, well, you know, it's true to them. What are the implications of that Ollie? I mean, then all of a sudden, man does whatever is right in his own eyes. Well, absolutely. And that's what we're seeing these days Charlie with self identification. We had a case in Scotland in the UK where this murderer decided to become trends so he'd get into a women's prison and they actually put him in the women's prison and then after that he decided to put on a baby and the prison service went along with it, it gave him diapers they gave him a dummy. And they were holding his hand when he left. So where does this end Charlie, you know, now they're targeting children the next thing is going to be trans age where adult men are identifying as babies. We're seeing that and they're pushing more and more extreme things. And you know, that's how they win this war they're trying to do on children. They basically make things normal so that you accept it. It might seem shocking now that a man is identifying as a baby, but in 5 years time the LGBT community, the alphabet, they're going to add that on their minor attracted people. They're going to add that. And if anybody questions that they're transphobic or a bigger. And I think that's the danger with this. I mean, that's just the beginning of it. You're right over the target, which is the death of absolute and objective truth. We'll turn the entire society into chaos. And language is how we represent things that are objectively true, and the post modernists, you go all the way back to one dimensional man, Herbert marcuse, Jacques derrida, you go back to Michelle Foucault. They've always been focused on language and this is one of the, this is the argument made in John one in the beginning was the word. You need to be able to have agreed upon terms, the logos, or else you have absolute social anarchy, which I'm afraid is actually part of their goal. I think they want more totalitarianism. Is there a totalitarian streak that runs through some of these people? Absolutely. I mean, you can see their levels of regression. If women are holding a speech for a feminist, these trans activists turn up, you know, they have their masks, they have all their facial piercings. And they're so aggressive, you know, they assault people, they leak people's address, they use it. They physically assault women that men are going into women's toilets and you know, screaming at women if they don't accept them being in there. And you know, these people, you know, they belong in North Korea. They hate democracy. They hate America. They hate freedom. They hate women. Send them to North Korea because that definitely aligns with their values. You know, I think these people, they're against free speech, and nobody is allowed to question them. You know, anyone that detransition is suddenly cast out of this cult, they are vilified and transgenderism is a cult. I will say that they welcome people with open arms. As soon as you dare to question the narrative, you are thrown out and vilified. And that's what exactly what I've experienced since announcing my detransition in my book. They're coming for me, but you know, I really don't care. I'm speaking up for kids. I'm going to have Ali respond to my question, which is, how should we treat? But let me show you how they're currently treating. This is from a now deleted video from the Boston children's hospital, play cut 32..

The Charlie Kirk Show
Detransitioning and Finding God With Oli London
"Want to make sure you had an opportunity to tell one part of your story that you mentioned that I was saving for later in our conversation. You said you found God. Why was that transformational in your process regarding your struggle with your gender identity? So it was something that I really needed and I got to a point, you know, for most of these people have mental health struggles that are changing their gender that are non binary, you know, many of them and firstly doctors should have a duty of care, you know, they should be looking at these factors. We're seeing many kids that have autism, many kids that have depression or suicidal tendencies. They are being diagnosed with gender dysphoria and being medically transitioned. So, you know, I suffered with depression, I suffered with body dysmorphia for most of my life. I've managed to overcome that now, but really going to church helped me overcome that because I was so lost, I was like a lost sheep alone in the wilderness, which is what many of these kids are the transitioning. They're welcomed into this cult, this trans girl, and then suddenly they're outcasts. So I was very confused I was very lost and just going to church gave me solace. It gave me meaning in life. And I've been missing that meaning my whole life. You know, I've been struggling with identity, but it was almost in reflection and narcissistic pursuits. I just wanted to look a certain way. I wanted to change every single detail about me, and I realized, you know, God made me and God makes all of us way done. So exactly. So why on earth should I or anybody be trying to change that? Instead, it should focus on what's inside and also focus on kindness as I've learned from many of the stories with Jesus, you know, when he went to cleanse the leper

The Charlie Kirk Show
How the Trans Agenda Has Corrupted Medicine With Oli London
"Have several questions here. Let me begin by asking you what is your current advice to a young person right now? That or a parent that feels as if medical transition. I put that in quotes because you actually don't transition, is the only option. In fact, parents email me, they say Charlie, I just got back from the doctor, and they say, would you rather have a trans sun or a dead daughter? What is your response to that? Absolutely. And that's the typical response of doctors. They try to coerce parents and children and pressure them that if you do not transition this child, you're going to have a dead child will actually, I think it's the opposite because these children don't realize just how much it changes the body. Just how much it messes with the brain when they have all these hormones, these puberty blockers and for a girl, we're seeing many cases now, mostly girls transitioning to boys. If they want to totally do the bad reason and everything, they actually have to have a massive chunk of their arm taken out which scars them for life to recreate body parts and it's just it's literally like what doctor mengel did during World War II experimenting on vulnerable children and we've seen to every child that's considering this. Don't do it. We're seeing studies coming out there. There was a study in the top gender clinic in Finland, the other day, the top gender clinic professor said that four out of 5 children teens they grow out to the gender. Most people grow out of it. They grow up to be healthy adults. They're very happy that they didn't transition. So to any child, you know, you might be feeling like this now for girls, you know, some girls are tomboys. They want to play soccer. They want to be outside. That's absolutely fine. And some boys are a little bit more galley, but a medically transitioning is never ever the answer. It's going to give them so many health problems. They're going to regret it. It's also so bad to mental health,

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"So I kind of found that message very helpful. With my story and I just realized I need to get back to the real me. So you say something interesting, which is almost that you were pursuing happiness. Do you think a majority of people that go through surgical interventions are actually trying to pursue some sort of happiness? Yeah, absolutely. And I think this is the case with we're seeing across the U.S. thousands of teens being put in the gender affirming our system. And you know, they love to use the word care as if it's helping these kids when really it's actually putting kids in harm's way. So, you know, a lot of people feel that this is a solution and a lot of doctors tell the kids and their parents, this is going to answer all of their problems. It's going to prevent suicide. It's going to prevent all of the depression, symptoms they're currently have. So, you know, we're seeing it as a fix, but it's actually a very temporary fix because in many cases we're seeing thousands of teens detransition. Many cases they were only happy for 6 months. They were only happy for a very short time before they realized they'd made a huge mistake. So I think, you know, in the age of social media and the modern age, everybody wants a quick fix, right? A lot of people have mental health struggles these days, especially since the pandemic and people want that happiness, they want that dopamine rush so they think if I go to a doctor they can give me hormones, they can give me puberty blockers. They can cut off my body parts. I'm going to be happy. And then they realized after a few months, wow, I've made a terrible mistake, but at that point it's irreversible and they've done a terrible harm to their body. So I'm going to ask you a question that might be hard to quantify. But the regret you felt once you felt that regret was it greater than any happiness high that you felt, I know that might be a hard equation, but does that make sense? Yeah, I mean, only ever really had temporary happiness. So I've had 32 surgeries in total, so I've had 6 notes, surgeries, jaw surgery, chin. So, you know, I've done a lot of things to myself and every time I was only happy for a couple of months. And then I would want more. And I think that's the case with many young people these days, they want more than never happy, and they think, you know, having a surgery, changing their gender is if the solution when it's really, really not. So for me, it was a temporary happiness and I deeply regret what I went through now. And almost, you know, I have a lot of followers on TikTok and Instagram, I almost feel like I was a very bad influence, you know? Because I was very open sharing my journey and stuff. And you know, now I'm actually realizing how harmful it can be for young people when they see influencers online. So I'm trying to be a positive influence and speak up, you know, because no child should be medically transitioned, no woman should feel unsafe in their own space and parents need to retain their rights. So no, I regret my past, but I'm trying to make amends, you know, I'm trying to redeem all of that. And I'm not trying to open up closed wounds. I'm just trying to communicate to some people out there that legitimately think they're doing something loving by chopping off an 11 year old's breasts..

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"And I've finally found happiness from within. So let's kind of go back a little bit in time. At what age were you when you started to get surgical interventions to try to change your aesthetic, your appearance, or what you thought of yourself to be? So it wasn't as a teenager for me because surgery wasn't really accessible. But when I moved to South Korea, South Korea is actually the plastic surgery capital of the world. So they perform a million procedures every year. Wow. So, you know, it's a real social pressure over there to look a certain way. And you know, you see these KPop stars you see billboards are beautiful people. And that is a sign of success. That is a sign of happiness. So it shows you that in order to succeed in life, you need to look a certain way. So I really started from there, I really hated the way I looked, I had terrible body dysmorphia, gender dysphoria, and you know, many of these Korean pop stars, they look very feminine, so I was going for that look. And it really became an unhealthy addiction. And surgery is like that for many young people. And I just became so confused with my identity, so unhappy. I wanted to reinvent myself. You know, I loved Korea. I love Korean people. I wanted to fit in there. And you know, I felt like I fitted in. And these days, Charlie, all of these trans activists, all of these non binary people, they constantly preach that you can identify as whatever you want. So I was like, why not? You know, I love Korea. I want to be Korean. Why not? You know, I didn't see the harm in it. In retrospect, I realized it was very delusional and I was kind of having a mental health crisis based on this surgery addiction and wanting to change my identity and then obviously I became a woman because I was still very confused and you know I finally woke up to that and I'm very happy with where I am right now. Okay, I have several questions and I want to encourage you and thank you for your willingness to speak out because I'm sure there's a fair amount of people that are coming after you because of what you're saying and doing. So let me ask the question this way, which is when you started to doubt your transition to a woman and I put that in quotes, walk us through that. What did you feel like? What did you begin to ask yourself? Was it outside influences? That's very interesting to me. Right. So I'd had all of this surgery. I'd had the hair extensions. I was going out in public as a transgender woman. But you know, I was always very respectful. I would never use women's spaces. I was, you know, I've always respected women. But you know, I got to a point where I was thinking, do I need to get more surgery? Why am I not happy? I kept questioning myself. I'm still not happy. I've done this transition. I've changed my entire identity. I'm still really unhappy inside. So I realized, you know, I'm even going to get loads more surgery. I'm going to transition fully or I can take a step back and reflect on what I'm doing and reflect that this is never going to make me happy, you know, changing your entire body changing your identity, changing your gender is never going to make you happy. It's just a temporary fix. So I realized that the wake-up moment was really, I was thinking, even going to do more surgery or I'm going to stop this and I started going to church and just spending time there at the close my eyes I would pray trying to find a solution I would speak with fellow Christians in the church and they would non judgmental they were very nice to me. And then I started reading passages from the Bible, and it just made me realize, you know, God's creates people, you know, the way they are. And there's no need to change..

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"So Ali, why don't you tell your story to our audience and we'll go from there? Right. So as a young kid, I always question my gender, I used to be a little bit more feminine. So I would play with Barbie dolls. I wasn't interested in sports. I wasn't interested in boys things. And as I became a teenager at school, you know, that's a very difficult time when you're going through puberty. You always question yourself, you know, some people get confused and at the time I was confused, I used to get bullied a lot. For the way I looked, people would call me ugly, horrible names, girls wouldn't want to date me when I was at school. They said I was too feminine or too much like a girl. So I'd always had questions about my gender and you know, I was kind of listening to what people are saying about me and I thought, you know what? I want to prove these buddies wrong. I want to change myself. I want to make myself look better. So as I became an adult, I started having surgery. I was living in Korea. I liked the Korean aesthetics, so it really started from there. And I got to a point where I'd had dozens of plastic surgeries over a ten year period. And I still wasn't happy. And I always had people telling me I was more feminine. I was more like a girl. You know, all throughout my life. So I got to a point where I was like, maybe these people are right. Maybe I've been chasing all this plastic surgery all this profession, maybe I'm misplacing this and maybe I'm meant to be a trans. So I actually had 11 facial feminization surgery procedures, which were so painful, couldn't even open my eyes for three days, and that was to feminize my face. I got hair extensions. I was living as a transgender woman, going out in public, you know, I was at the Cannes Film Festival wearing dresses and, you know, I was happy for a short time. It was a temporary fix, which I think many people that transitioned. They have that temporary serotonin that dopamine rush, and then after a while, that kind of evaporates and then you realize, wow, I've made a mistake. So I detransitioned late last year when I got to a point and I was like, why have I done this to myself? I started going to church and realized, you know, there's mortal life than trying to pursue someone trying to become someone that you're not..

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"I am told by campus activists that we are not allowing enough young people, the opportunity to chop off their breasts or chemically castrate themselves. I am told when I go on college campus is that it's affirming care to have 11 year olds. Go in multi hour surgery to try to change their biology. Very powerful story we have this hour is incorporates the story of Ali London. Ali has a new book coming out called detransition, a memoir. And I'm going to allow Ali to tell his story here because it's very powerful and it applies directly to the times that we are living in Ali, welcome to the program. Hi, Charlie, great to meet you. So Ali, why don't you tell your story to our audience and we'll go from there? Right. So as a young kid, I always question my gender, I used to be a little bit more feminine. So I would play with Barbie dolls. I wasn't interested in sports. I wasn't interested in boys things. And as I became a teenager at school, you know, that's a very difficult time when you're going through puberty. You always question yourself, you know, some people get confused and at the time I was confused, I used to get bullied a lot. For the way I looked, people would call me ugly, horrible names, girls wouldn't want to date me when I was at school. They said I was too feminine or too much like a girl. So I'd always had questions about my gender and you know, I was kind of listening to what people are saying about me and I thought, you know what? I want to prove these buddies wrong. I want to change myself. I want to make myself look better. So as I became an adult, I started having surgery. I was living in Korea. I liked the Korean aesthetics, so it really started from there. And I got to a point where I'd had dozens of plastic surgeries over a ten year period. And I still wasn't happy. And I always had people telling me I was more feminine. I was more like a girl. You know, all throughout my life. So I got to a point where I was like, maybe these people are right. Maybe I've been chasing all this plastic surgery all this profession, maybe I'm misplacing this and maybe I'm meant to be a trans. So I actually had 11 facial feminization surgery procedures, which were so painful, couldn't even open my eyes for three days, and that was to feminize my face. I got hair extensions. I was living as a transgender woman, going out in public, you know, I was at the Cannes Film Festival wearing dresses and, you know, I was happy for a short time. It was a temporary fix, which I think many people that transitioned. They have that temporary serotonin that dopamine rush, and then after a while, that kind of evaporates and then you realize, wow, I've made a mistake.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Oli London Tried to Cure His Unhappiness by Changing His Identity
"I am told by campus activists that we are not allowing enough young people, the opportunity to chop off their breasts or chemically castrate themselves. I am told when I go on college campus is that it's affirming care to have 11 year olds. Go in multi hour surgery to try to change their biology. Very powerful story we have this hour is incorporates the story of Ali London. Ali has a new book coming out called detransition, a memoir. And I'm going to allow Ali to tell his story here because it's very powerful and it applies directly to the times that we are living in Ali, welcome to the program. Hi, Charlie, great to meet you. So Ali, why don't you tell your story to our audience and we'll go from there? Right. So as a young kid, I always question my gender, I used to be a little bit more feminine. So I would play with Barbie dolls. I wasn't interested in sports. I wasn't interested in boys things. And as I became a teenager at school, you know, that's a very difficult time when you're going through puberty. You always question yourself, you know, some people get confused and at the time I was confused, I used to get bullied a lot. For the way I looked, people would call me ugly, horrible names, girls wouldn't want to date me when I was at school. They said I was too feminine or too much like a girl. So I'd always had questions about my gender and you know, I was kind of listening to what people are saying about me and I thought, you know what? I want to prove these buddies wrong. I want to change myself. I want to make myself look better. So as I became an adult, I started having surgery. I was living in Korea. I liked the Korean aesthetics, so it really started from there. And I got to a point where I'd had dozens of plastic surgeries over a ten year period. And I still wasn't happy. And I always had people telling me I was more feminine. I was more like a girl. You know, all throughout my life. So I got to a point where I was like, maybe these people are right. Maybe I've been chasing all this plastic surgery all this profession, maybe I'm misplacing this and maybe I'm meant to be a trans. So I actually had 11 facial feminization surgery procedures, which were so painful, couldn't even open my eyes for three days, and that was to feminize my face. I got hair extensions. I was living as a transgender woman, going out in public, you know, I was at the Cannes Film Festival wearing dresses and, you know, I was happy for a short time. It was a temporary fix, which I think many people that transitioned. They have that temporary serotonin that dopamine rush, and then after a while, that kind of evaporates and then you realize, wow, I've made a mistake.

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"Hey everybody, Charlie Kirk here. I simply can not say enough good things about strong cell. I personally take it every day and it has changed my life more energy more focus and overall I just feel better. Strong cell has NADH. You should Google it. It's a real thing. I've studied it for years and it makes a huge difference. It also has marine collagen that supports your body's health at the cellular level. Visit strong cell dot com slash Charlie to learn more. Use special discount code Charlie at checkout to receive 20% off for Kirk listeners that is strong cell dot com forward slash Charlie used promo code Charlie. Hey everybody today in the Charlie Kirk show Ali London joins us for a powerful hour. He tried to become something he is not. He tried to become a woman and he regretted it, detransition. He has a warning for all of you parents for all you grandparents. Listen to this entire episode and send it to your friends. It is chilling. Email us your thoughts, freedom at Charlie Kirk dot com. Open up your podcast app and type in Charlie Kirk show and hit subscribe, get involved with turning point USA Today at TP USA dot com. Buckle up everybody here. We go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here. Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus. I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running The White House folks. I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy, his spirit, his love of this country. He's done an amazing job. Building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, turning point USA. We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here. Brought to you by Andrew and Todd a Sierra Pacific mortgage for personalized loan services you can count on, go to Andrew and Todd dot com, the wonderful Andrew and Todd dot com. I am told by campus activists that we are not allowing enough young people, the opportunity to chop off their breasts or chemically castrate themselves. I am told when I go on college campus is that it's affirming care to have 11 year olds. Go in multi hour surgery to try to change their biology. Very powerful story we have this hour is incorporates the story of Ali London. Ali has a new book coming out called detransition, a memoir. And I'm going to allow Ali to tell his story here because it's very powerful and it applies directly to the times that we are living in Ali, welcome to the program. Hi, Charlie, great to meet you..

ESPN FC
"oli" Discussed on ESPN FC
"This many chances is all he has. So Oli has has no complaints. They give it his best. We all did say that he wasn't good enough. He tried to show us that he was. But in the end, he wasn't good enough. And that's just a bit of fact. And I know obviously he needs to take a lot of responsibility. But that performance from that team today was embarrassed. I think it was a performance of a team that had pretty much sooner. It's a team that if you went off of the excuse, didn't have much of much direction on quite sure what they're doing are playing with little confidence and probably know that the writing is on the wall for the manager. And I've certainly been there when you know the manager. It's media a case of how many games as opposed to him ever keeping his job and how difficult it is for you as a player. Knowing that change is coming. And I think that's what you saw from Manchester United. But Manchester United the hierarchy have kind of forced the situation on the players. It's been evident to everyone that oligarchs are simply was not good enough. But they want to stick by a company man who wouldn't upset the upper car too much, that wouldn't challenge them as a board too much. And the hope that somehow just the mere fact of who they are of their history of their reputation, somehow delivers results. Sport doesn't work that way. And that's what you've seen now. Manchester United, arguably one 80 well. Inarguably one of the biggest brands in the world football probably one of the biggest brands in world sport. I've become a Rory Jew for everybody. Stevie, you were saying they were songs in this match that they just stopped listening. Yeah, listen, when you're the coach and things are not going well, everybody looks to you to come up with the answer. And it looked as though the players had decided that they didn't believe only anymore. And I couldn't see that, you know, we certainly haven't talked about the city game in a Liverpool game. The fight that was in the Liverpool and city game albeit misdirected wasn't them work for them. And that's why I was here. I got the impression that they stopped believing that only had the answers. Right. And as soon as the players don't believe.

The Kicker
"oli" Discussed on The Kicker
"So the drum beats are getting louder and louder that may force news organizations that took the steel dossier, which was this collection of allegations about Trump and Russia took it seriously. Last week, The Washington Post announced that it was cutting some stories and editors knows on stories about some of their coverage of the basically admitting that they're reporting was flawed that the source that they were light on was unreliable. There are hints of more of these sort of reckonings to come. And it sort of the whole thing raises questions about the media's coverage of Trump of Trump and Russia and the dossier as this kind of symbol of all that was wrong there. It's super complicated. There are a lot of parties. There are a lot of legal actions. There's indictments with investigations, which is why I'm so happy to be joined today by Eric limbo media critic for The Washington Post. And Marcy Wheeler, a writer who writes for a blog empty wheel net, who have both followed this in incredible detail and are going to help us sort through it all. Welcome Eric mercy. I want to start with a question that I tried to sort of frame in a piece that suggested this week, which was, why is it, is it your sense, it's my sense of it's taken a long time for there to be a sort of a broader media sense that this document is fatally flawed and really start holding news organizations to account. Is that your sense as well and why do you think it's taken as long as it has marcie let's start with you. I think for one, because the issue got so polarized, so. For Republicans, the entirety of the Russian investigation is the dossier. For normal people, we have undercover. And as a deliberate way to undercut there's abundant reason to believe that was the entire point of any disinformation in it. Paul Manafort came back from a meeting with Oli da paska deputy and told rent's priebus, we're going to undercut the Russian investigation by talking about the dossier full time. And that is exactly what has happened for four years leading up to the derm investigation, which led up to this indictment. So that's what the Republican Party has been doing relentlessly ever since..

The Charlie Kirk Show
"oli" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"Point USA chapter and very good. And I also want to thank Oli and the amazing team here at Baylor, you work very hard to pull off this event, really is terrific. It's not easy to do this, especially off campus, and obviously we'd like to be on campus, but still a pretty amazing turnout I have to say. And it's really important. So we're on tour right now. And when we were thinking about what kind of we wanted to do on our tour, when we first started doing this, it was interesting, we're always trying to be the most relevant and trying to communicate to you. Our target audience in a way that you appreciate and understand. And we never wanted our tour ever to be about a specific issue. But we felt in particular as kind of as things were developing in our country, especially after last summer. And with the implementation of this radical ideology critical race theory in a variety of different ways, we said, we're going to have to explain what this is and push back against this. And so we said, let's have this tour exposing critical racism to her. Of course, no controversy at all across the country with that, we're going to Vermont next week. I think they're already burning buildings in anticipation of arrival. We're not going to allow to say what our hotel we're speaking at yet next week because of out of safety concerns. But this is a really serious issue. And tonight's speech will be a little bit different because I'm going to come after this from why should Christians reject critical race theory. Now maybe you're here tonight, you're not a Christian. I hope you become a Christian, and maybe I'm going to just go straight gospel on you and why I think you need to accept Jesus Christ as your lord and savior. But this is the 5th.

The Wolf's Den
"oli" Discussed on The Wolf's Den
"Pay bills or your mortgage like always take some profit of the table. Because i know law people that have never done that and then they just get burned and it might be away three full years again. Before you know. Ready things guy pumping again a regenerate that money back yeah predictions right just just you know i know there's no certainty where do you guess. Where do you think. Bitcoin closes at the end of the year. December thirty one. I never liked giving predictions. I six for fun here. This is totally funny personal opinion. Yeah i mean where are we at with bitcoin. At the moment we're forty five where four forty five k. With bitcoin dollars. I mean i i really really hope we. We break through the sixty five k. Mark i mean if we can even get back there by the end of the year. I think that'd be amazing. I think we will. But i think unfortunately there might be a real hard sell off. I think a fair him. I hope the theory can get ten thousand I think we probably realistically i. I think it will go more than the full. Four thousand three hundred which was kind of the peak of what we had back in may but You know six seven thousand. I'm hoping for But i but i i. I'm still. I'm in that situation as well. I kind of like i'm excited. Everything's go up but equally as well. I'm really excited to accumulate more for so long goodtime holdings great any last bit of advice that you want to Give to your to your cut. A fan base my fan base and people that you know. What would you say about you know investing in you know. What's the rules that you want people to go by. If you had just gives some advice here. I think do research like research is so important and just understand crypto and despite the grand scheme of things understand what bitcoin is what blockchain technology is what theorem is and goes down the cap table from know the highest market caps. And work your way down because a lotta people they get onto ready low low cap very very high-risk coins coins food coins this and they don't really understand. Stand it understand the fundamentals from researching. Don't just listen what you may say into by And i think like have a strategy always have a plan like if you'll going to invest in something and it does attacks or three axle however much ex you wanted to go you know. Take take that money out that you've invested in an always always always takeout prophets. You can never lose if it taking out. Profits set aside money. If you've realized a gain for tax because that will come around and bite your office Always always sold out and I think just never invest in a thing that you'll you'll willing to lose a lot of a lot of people do it on Rail hod and people get rid excited because they think what they could have us. I think when you less greedy you'll your more wooded I think if you've made money that you could as i said before if you've made money that you can use to change your life in a positive way you know help others get yourself in a better position in life. I think that's just so important so important and i've done that recently. In the last couple of months. I up and now since two thousand seventeen had never even taken out my original and investment of invested. Quite a bit and i was like. It's insane how. I've never actually withdrew that to my bank account You know so I'm really happy i did that. And you know what it. Put the biggest smile on my face when i withdrew the money to my account i went. Oh my god way over a minute. So so this kind of digital digital assets i've been trading along at. She has now value my bank. It was insane. And it's you know it's a it's a nice nice achievement for show have people folly. What's the best way your youtube What are you do much stuff. I'm on switzer. Instagram moon youtube as well. What's the What's your handle on youtube. How we find. Ali whites ally whites us one good deal. I listen. it's great to speak to you Perhaps will do some deals together. If you see anything great let me know always open. You know you know where i am. You know. i'd love to chat. Sounds good my friend. Everybody ali white thanks for coming on sheds your friends. Don't forget the subscribe This is interesting. I'll see where. Bitcoin goes by the end of the alley. I think it might be higher than you think. I think it's going hope is liable. We'll see they have a great day.

The Wolf's Den
"oli" Discussed on The Wolf's Den
"I think anyone. I hate when people try to tell you. It's going to the moon to my talk to you know where it's going. I mean there's funny thing is is those exact people are saying. It's going to the moon as soon as there's a red data nut so bearish i'm so marriage athle- right. I mean come on. Like i respect what you first thing that you said. I respected most. Like i bought it. I never sold it. I'm in that camp and it's not it's not because of any great philosophical is not because of like i'll never sell. It's just that. I just bought it as a hedge and i. I don't think it helps. It helps to hold. If you pick the right thing and you hold you can do very well. I mean as an example. I go in chainlink. You've heard of chain link right. Yes so i go and chain link twenty cents On you know. Now it's i think it's trading around about twenty dollars You know did did extremely well from that you know Small amount of money in that new tenants astronomical amount and that was ready from Holding you know. I could have sold that when it was worth nothing. Got my money out. As i know like i also don't want to be the person that's involved in this space. So you're holding bitcoin. Yeah if they're in a couple of others so mobile more but yeah yes. But i'm more a much more volley own large pieces of companies that are involved in all aspects of blockchain crypto. Accept coins. i do not wanna fuck with the coins because i. I'm concerned about the in the united states. I don't want. I'm very fortunate personal. I've i've went to jail many many years ago. And i've now rehabilitated. My image and everyone. I expressed beloved by investors and people. When i was i would not want to inadvertently dabble in something only to find out that. I got myself in trouble again. It's just not worth it to me. So i take certain risks that other people can take. I just refused even expose myself. To any possible scrutiny. Like that so. I avoid anything involving a coin i just said voided it like the plague. I avoid things that are involved in the inflation of a coin. I just very dangerous. I don't wanna be. I don't want to lose money. If i was to get behind the coin. I could do a big. I could really pump a fucking coin. Okay not get behind that. So i involved myself in things like that are really more than nuts and bolts the infrastructure of crypto and. I'm very very excited about that. And i think there's gonna be some really major advances in the base like for example that right now cryptos really very seldom used for transaction. I believe that one day. I don't think will be bitcoin there. I think they'll people will be using stable tokens in commerce i. I'm a big believer using stable in focusing on that. Aspect of crypto of stable tokens for commerce. You have that. We have a model while which is essentially wallet. We have had a million people with the wall right now. But we're lodging payment sp prosecuted the centralized paper alpha crypto and very powerful very user friendly. So that's launch. It's really to watch now. Just about the big deal in asia and missile nounce that and then kind of start really rolling forward so the things that you love about crypto right you love the idea that the centralization financial empowerment. It's almost levels the playing field with wall street bit. They don't big edge they have right. What don't you like about crypto anything that you bothers you about. I think really like the main coins and just like the projects shit going doing anything i think. Look like you can have fun at the end of the day. If someone's going to put their money into its it's at their own risk. But i think a lot of people are also stupid and put everything they have into something and then when it doesn't go that way they like. Wow i've lost everything. Announcement already. Ship position is therefore. I mean you know i just i just think that mean coins of the issue and i think you know doj nitty i think hit max like seventy cents and i think that going to seventy seven. That was a massive indicate the that could have been the top. I still don't know. I still don't know whether sixty five k. Was was was was the top for then. Are we gonna go back there. I don't know. I think the mean coins and the coins just needs to fizzle out and people need to realize that they might be fun. You can put a bit in but do not get them to market caps of billions and billions. Because it's always gonna end. Well i think you know it's interesting i if you what's my hope of a big one. I hope. Bitcoin ends the year at ten thousand dollars see. I'm the opposite bitcoin to go down as much as possible. Because i want to buy more ally. Yeah in this. I don't hope. Bitcoin goes up like i hope it goes down because i want more of it because i think it's a good store value. Add and i think that's the fundamental difference between someone that really is investing with the intent versus not. Let me just explain to you manipulation. I'm an expert in the stock market. Right is that it's buying something with the intent. On driving the price higher. That is the definition of manipulation. It's making a purchase with the intent of increasing the price. Because theoretically you should want you don't want to increase the price with your purchase because that means you're paying more for what you bought the idea. Is you wanna let you want to buy slow not to drive the price up and then after you're done by then you want the prices go up a lot of people. i think. i think people really need to understand that with with bitcoin. Is there anything else. Whatever the coin you like whatever investment. You're making. I really believe that you have to have a longer term arising on this that. I think it's very very dangerous. And never say impossible almost impossible to time the market that closely unless you all literally wired in at the highest level. You're watching it every second much safer to not do that. Auto trade i've never really traded I i look for fundamentals. I look for the narrative in the market. What's driving it. I have that for so of like mid mid. Tom outlook and then i looked definitely a longer time as well as holding star value and bitcoin theorem as well. I think i think that's the smartest thing to do. I think you know for some people out there. You know they might have the Idea of just holding and holding holding which is great. But i also think if you are up a good amount of money and it can change your life in a positive way and it can help you.

The Wolf's Den
"oli" Discussed on The Wolf's Den
"It goes against i think everyone. That's pretty much involving Any you you never really want to have. That one's centralized You space to be decentralized as a whole whole aim. In the whole point of crypto everything is recorded on the blockchain for people to view. Yes it it can be hard sometimes and if people have not. Kyc or they wallets assault mysterious and they using things like tornadoes. Cash to send funds around the nia. You can do that. I mean today. I think it was one of the largest tax in on poly six hundred million And the hacker has just been a tormenting them by sending transactions with notes in them An and it's insane. I mean i. I think you'll give it back. I think it's more of a status thing of light. Look me. I was able to do hair. Okay have you money back. But i i wanted to excel. I do not. I mean six hundred million like it's i i think like i mean if he is right now. Where's the price of poly right now. How did it go. How much is it down today. So it was on. It was on pauline network. So let me just have a look appalling network so poli network but it was. It was They took it out of Was it liquidity pools. So they they consisting more two hundred seventy million on the therrien blockchain hundred and fifty million on the binavince much. Ain't an age four minute on the polygon network so it was so from poli network. Yeah i mean. It's i mean it's it's insane fucking money but i don't know if i was the hacker thinking like this is a hacker. How can you. How can you do anything with that. Like the is now known they can use things like tornado cash to mosque and cover up the transactions. But i still think there's a possibility that that can be traced. It's too much money to to to lose. I hope they give it back because that's really sad. 'cause it's loads of community that's people's money that's committed community money so i don't know what what we'll say hopefully they will hopefully will want to grow your business diversifier content. You're not going to find a better tool out. There than melania live streaming needs blazing fast response time low. Cpu usage all available. Right in your browser go to mellon app dot com slash wolf and start streaming today. So you're in the investment banking game right you do venture capital so yes not not so of autumn lasko all using of an funds. It's just me and my business partner. But we basically saw their vc's that were popping up in the crypto space and traditionally like vc's they help with seed fundraising and They might help them with so mark saying they might help them with getting other it influences on bold or raising more money and we basically just witness the didn't really doing thing You know they kind of gave the money but they didn't really provide any additional so of help away really like trying to change that by providing additional help without. We started up a youtube channel. Simple crypto so so we then actually take the projects that we have invested in. We do like a sixty second round up over that project You know make it really really professional video and so that people can really understand what it is more of a retail perspective than like ready ready technical and then we'll also then what with increasing like tutorial videos so we really try and so as having a production company and being in youtube for ten years a new marketing under house used social media house crepe videos and yet we did that and We've i mean we've invested in some like really really a awesome awesome projects. It's it's it's just growing so much. There's there's the thing is this project popping up all the time and you need to figure out like waltz is worthwhile will is what is a great project to get into. I mean You know today for example you know we. We invested in a project. Who defy safety and they just closed one million dollars seed round. We're really pleased to be a part of them. And then you know we also very much look for for the space and at the moment defy and gaming is is interest is with investing now with al ventures invested in an fte the other week pope polka fantasy kind of an upcoming all pg meta game marketplace. And if he's really cool. Like japanese office involves One of their advises is. He's a ceo of a Is really cool to see Traditional gaming companies. Getting both really to to to you know the nfc face. What do you look for in to do. Put your money in yes. Yeah yeah. I mean it takes. It takes time to find walt good. We have multiple different conversations with team. We try and You know the process began vote. We really try not value. Like i don't wanna get anything. If i'm not adding value to you know the project and i think at the moment it's really like the narrative drive so the narrative driver is defy. It's is also f. t. Like i don't know whether you're a big fan of nfc's on all you do you like nfc. I know any no adam important. They actually creating some myself. I'm in the process of doing that right now. And i'm to launch. But i'm very much into the defy space. So let me said. I haven't bought any and if tease is i'm just not a collectible i don't do i don't deal collectibles like another big. I never did it. So but i think i like. Nafta for a different reason. I think that the whole what you're seeing right now is a very very small use case for tease. I believe you could ultimately us ed. These for a vast array of things out there. Whether it's real estate just many many things could be..

The Wolf's Den
"oli" Discussed on The Wolf's Den
"Hey guys j. b. wall street in the wolves. Dan i got a great guest. Someone up we're gonna have an incredible conversation. 'cause he's an expert in the world of crypto blockchain's and influence in that space. He does venture capital. So he really knows his way around the space. We could have a very frank conversation about the good. The bad the ugly and the insane in the crypto currency world. So i got only white. How are you buddy. I'm good my i'm good. Glad to be here right so let let's get let's get right out the cases. How much do you hate shit coins. Yeah no fan of them. No fan of them. I think is just one of those things that people kind of jump on the bandwagon with by. Think like you literally unless you're right in there from the start you're gonna you're gonna lose money and i pus- stay well away from that type of thing. It's it's great. I think problem. I have with them and i wanted to start right there because it really annoys the hell out of me. 'cause it de legitimizes. The crypto world in other words like there's some really great stuff it's amazing applications and i think that the future. I don't think it's going to be versus. There's no i don't ever believe there'll be. No banks were no money. I think it's going to be sort of like apple and android. You know they run side by side right. You'll be on ramps and off france into both. You know it's this is back. It's it's not like you're probably too young to remember betamax before like one. So it's not like vhs and betamax. It's not one only one. I think it's gonna be a mixture. But i think that the sooner regulation comes into crypto really stringent regulation and. This other stuff stops it. It's better for the space. What do you think. I think you completely right. I mean we're already seeing a lot of a of of regulation being talked about. And i think that's really what needs to happen for. The whole of the crypto space to to to blow up and really have that mass adoption and an israeli Deregulation behind it. I think there are so many different as you call them. Schick coins are popping up every single day that try and act like they have some kind of fundamentals behind them. Where you know. You'll get an extra fee for this if you hold franks amount and at the end of the day that they're never going to survive when the might tons barish you know that they're not going to be around with. So how'd you get involved in crypto and for how many years have you been involved so i first involved in crypto in a actually two thousand seventeen and so the first time ever really heard about crypto was super super interested Had a lot of friends that are involved in it as well. And as i write a kayla's investor money is invested some money and i basically had the I i just. I just wanted to hold. I never wanted to sell and that was the biggest problem. I had diamond hands away through and was like this is going to be the new the new thing. And it's never gonna draw. And i did really really well And it just you know. The crash came and it went down significantly. And i was down a lot of money but you know i kept holding it and still holding it now and recovered law and massively better. So i'm glad. I held it but yeah i wish i i wish i took profits on the way up and taking profits is always a very good thing. He can't lose if you if you if you taking profits as i've learned i'm always learning like i So i got involved then and then off to the crash happened. I kind of just like left. The space i i wasn't really that involved on a technical level or wanting to get involved that much to it i just wanted to invest and then i came into the space in january again this year and i met a couple of different people in the space who will like incredibly knowledgeable about with us in two thousand thirteen and it just i just spoke so many different ideas and i love chris i. I've always always loved it. I think it's going to be the future. Like a will be the future for sure one way or another it will get there and i think it's incredibly interesting for sure when you say cryptos future. Do you tell me if you were to imagine the world five years from now. Where do you see. How do you see crypto fitting into the world and five. So it's two thousand twenty. Let's just say two thousand twenty five. Yeah that's the world. I mean i mean look like at the end of the day like you know. Businesses run on information. And you know the false information is received a more accurate is the better. You know blockchain is ideal for that. And and i genuinely see a lot of businesses nitty every business moving over to blockchain technology. One way or another. I see bitcoin. Being vat main is that main currency that everyone talks about within the crypto space is the most well known one and i do pus. Any see that being so of the digital goal the digital asset of value. But i think like a fairy. I think theorem is kind of like the internet of things. It's kind of everything. The amount of The amount of you know decentralized applications launching on. I just think the space is is growing so much but but i think as you pointed out the start like regulation is really gonna play a key pa and i think that's what might have an impact. I still don't know whether we're going to be reaching up to the sixty five k. That we had all offices kind of a bit of a bit of run. We're having and then things are going fly now. I think it really depends whether regulators are going to acts on this fast and start bringing in things. That's just not going to be good for the market currently but i think longer time it will be good. You mentioned the theorem right and is interesting. I had a conversation with someone named robert. Beatles who's my partner in monarch be who He's known as beatles in the crypto world was the first person that really spoke to me about crypto in a very sober way that i could connect with like i. I was scaring these. Oh it's going through a million. It's gonna be this. There's gonna be no more money. Except for and i was like. That's just fucking nonsense to me. That's just nonsense in never made sense and it's very obvious that you know when you're looking to manipulate something and keep the bubble going that wants. Something goes to thirty thousand. You have to say it's going to a million because if it's just going to forty five thousand that's not good enough for the average person to want to invest. So they stopped winning. All these unrealistic expectations can be. It'll be a million by the end of the year. Come on but he came through with a very very different take on it and really the first person that was really off list number one. it's digital goal. that's not currently. It's not designed to be currently it's never going to be currency it will never function well as currency because it's gone into complete different direction. You cannot use. He he was like saying you can use it as currency because it's shitty currency goes. It's an incredibly efficient store value. And it's not it becomes more more more more of a stall as more people start to buy it and is more nodes and more broader representation right but he also said to me this morning because we're talking about about monarch and the ability used therion blocks and he's like you know honestly theory. Blockchain is really sucks. Because i hate to say it he goes it just really is so flawed in so many ways and it's really a shame because he's a brilliant guy the talent they just they just never. It's like it's just really really crappy doing what it's supposed to do it slow as expensive..

UFC Unfiltered with Jim Norton and Matt Serra
"oli" Discussed on UFC Unfiltered with Jim Norton and Matt Serra
"Welcome to you. Have filtered matt neier here still on zoom and matt noticed that i am also bald by cameras. Look like cyclops. When you move back. I know we'll do you like the mustache. Abs- jimmy let me tell you what. How facial hair kind of. Yeah sure it looks good on us. Yeah good on us. It looks good is that is that a real facial hair is at look at the left side you. Where am i looking at the left side. It's a little white comes in right on. yeah. I wanna be a biker. So i'm trying. I'm trying to look like a fucking chuck zito going on you like in this role. Yeah but it's not. One had auditioned for doug bellevue's oh so worthless role a worthless role character. Yeah i've done a few things. I'll be i'll be back to normal and a couple of days. We have great. Mma writer for yahu sports kevin oli and we should bring him in and chat. What a night of fights. I'm a fucking.

KOMO
"oli" Discussed on KOMO
"Season on our state highways across Washington, barked trees from the state Department of Transportation says plan accordingly. How long the backups extend How long the delays car depend on what people do if people stay plugged in, and they planned the route. Accordingly, those backups will be shorter and the delays will be not Islam alongside the ongoing Dortmund five Seneca Street Project to revive I five returns this weekend, closing all but one lane south, bound by five between I 90 And Spokane Street coming up now on the Cuomo morning news, real fear that Delta will dominate this fall. I'm Brian Calvert, with the covid variant causing concerns across the Northwest. It's 804 1st. Let's check the roads are Cuomo Traffic? Every 10 minutes from the Dubin Law Group Traffic Center. Here's Kierra. We're finding off and on slowing north on I five traveling out of federal way this morning and into C. Tech. And then it's a long slow go in Seattle from the south End of Boeing Field to the convention center Rear. Also fighting delays on the H 509 the begin around 128th, and they stay with you to that First Avenue south original. Beyond 90 nine's backed up past Cloverdale. We've been seeing big delays on Roxbury, Olson on West Marginal and on Highland Park Way all around that First Avenue South Bridge area. And north, um 167 scattered slowing outta Sumner into Pacific some pretty lighter light slowing out of Auburn and towards Canton and heavier drive from to 12 to 4. Oh, five. We are really dragging this morning on north, Um four or five from the West Valley Highway into the Newcastle area. Also now building between 9 90 in downtown Bellevue. Southbound four or five is sluggish out of alder wood all the way to state route 5 to 2 and plus some lighter slowing as you're traveling through Newcastle as well, South and I five also finding this light. Are slowing as you're working your way through Linwood and then again out of Mount like terrorists, our next Cuomo traffic at 8 14. I'll report this time is sponsored by Oli Ortho. Why take a long, stressful drive? When the world class physicians at Oli Ortho? All right there in your own backyard? Every step of the way? Ali Ortho has your back your knee, your hip, your shoulder, you get it. Holy Ortho dot com. Your life in motion. I look at the weather. Now, here's meteorologist Kristin Clark, while conditions stay comfortably cool, relatively speaking through at least Thursday, with daytime temperatures in the seventies to near 80 degrees, The Heat gets cranked up starting Friday, well into the eighties, close to 90 in South sound,.

Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM
"oli" Discussed on Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM
"Harrison. He ducked in hold worries on fire. Yeah, Whatever Ship on 3123%. This is Denver Nuggets. Basketball 14 on the shot clock Inbound goes to Gary Harris. Lobs it often Holyoke and she gets double teamed again Download a park and he dumped at home with two hands make that a 15 to nothing run Denver and the Nuggets leader by the Osho. The Nuggets swept the home and home versus the tables when they took down Minnesota for the second straight game on Tuesday. 1 23 to 1 16. Good guys tonight. Denver will finish off the home stand as they play host to the Dallas Mavericks. Coming up in your Denver Nugget pregame preview. Jason Kozminski will break this game down the Keys contest, and assistant coach Ryan Bowen will speak to truth when he joins us and our coaches show, you know, we know we got to put four games together, but yeah, there's gonna be a lot of these. Hey, see these guys again? I think we played dolls a couple weeks. So Yeah, it's almost like a mini playoff backstories. It's the Nuggets and the Mavericks. Small precious metal versus Tom Cruise in top gun and your pregame show is coming up. Next, find the control yoke in Denver Nuggets MBA to head like Gary Hairs. Eastern Nuggets Preview with Mark Gordon Oli Yokich has a point guard on drives on And he dumped.

Fresh Air
U.S. economy rebounded strongly in the third quarter
"Candidates are campaigning this hour in the closely contested state of Florida, Joe Biden pledging a safe path out of the Corona virus pandemic, accusing Donald Trump of bungling the response. The Trump campaign's been working to draw voters attention two bright spots of the economy today that includes the Commerce Department's report that in the third quarter, the US economy grew at an annual pace of 33.1%. NPR's gyms are Oli. The number was about what most economists had been expecting, though many investors were hoping for something higher. The Commerce Department says consumer spending and housing we're both strong growth plummeted after the Corona virus lockdowns began in March, Economic activity fell at an annual rate of 31.4%. Now the economy has recovered a lot of lost ground. But millions of Americans who were laid off earlier in the year remain out of work, and economists say it will be some time before the recovery is complete. Meanwhile, Corona virus cases have spiked again in Europe in the United States.

Fresh Air
Stocks have their worst day in a month as virus cases surge
"Stocks are tumbling this hour. We've seen the Dow fall more than 840 points, or roughly 3% of the other major market into see slide about 2.5% so far in midday trading. It's the Corona virus. Here's NPR's gyms are Oli. The Dow is on track to have its worst day since early September and is down for the month of October. The S and P 500 is down across the board. The decline follows a spike in new covert cases on Friday and Saturday in the U. S. There were 80,000 new cases reported. There's also been a record spike in both France and Italy. Companies that have been most affected by the lockdowns, such as airlines and cruise ships saw their shares plummet. Investors are also said to be reacting to more signs of trouble and talks over a stimulus bill. It now looks increasingly likely no deal will be negotiated before the election gyms

Morning Becomes Eclectic
Stock-market investors brace for busiest week of earnings in October’s final hurrah
"Be a volatile one on Wall Street. NPR's gyms are Oli reports that some of the biggest companies were scheduled to release their third quarter earnings. More than a third of the companies in the S and P 500 are expected to release their earnings this week. They include several of the tech giants that have been driving the market forward, including Apple, Facebook and Google's parent company. Meanwhile, the Commerce Department or release a first estimate of the nation's economic growth during the quarter, it's expected to show a sharp rebound after the big drop that followed the pandemic lockdowns. Investors are also waiting to see if Congress in the White House can agree on another stimulus bill. Jims AA roly NPR news. At

Morning Becomes Eclectic
Deutsche Bank fined $150 million over Jeffrey Epstein ties
"Bank has agreed to pay $150 million to settle charges it failed to monitor its relationship with the late sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein. NPR's gyms are Oli reports. The bank was also cited for its relationship with two European banks accused of money laundering. New York's top financial services regulator says Epstein was a client of Deutsche Bank between 2013 and 2018. By then, Epstein had served time for sex offenses, and regulators say some of his activities should have raised red flags at the bank, for instance, used his accounts to pay Russian models and girls with East European surnames. And made periodic suspicious cash withdrawals. He also paid for school tuition and travel expenses for girls. Regulators also cited the bank for acting as an intermediary for Danish and Estonian bank's suspected of money laundering. In a statement, Deutschebank acknowledged its mistakes and said it had learned from them. Jims AA Roly NPR NEWS.

Inside Podcasting
Producer Shima Oliaee on Making Dolly Partons America
"Hello and welcome to inside podcasting the show in which creators discussed their craft I'm your host Sky Pillsbury today? I speak with Shima Oli. Who together with Radio Lab Founder Jad Abu Murad produced the award winning show Dolly Parton America. And when I say award-winning, it's kind of personal for me. You see Dolly Parton. America beat out the show. You're listening to right now for the title of Discover Pods Best New podcast of two thousand nineteen. I guess I should also mention that there show just won a peabody award, and sadly inside podcasting wasn't in the running for that one. Regardless the fact that podcast I produced was in the running with a show about Dolly. Parton will always put a smile on my face when I was nine I idolized. Does I spent hours staring at her glossy album covers imagining what it would be like to be glamorous singer. And while that dream come true, it was still an incredible thrill for me to talk to Shema about this show. In case you haven't listened to the series yet. I want to play you a clip. This is from an episode called dixie disappearance in which Jad and she might take a look at some of the contradictions behind Dolly's iconic, persona. The episode centers around a wildly popular tourist event called Don. DIXIE STAMPEDE! It's a Rodeo style dinner theater, in which the civil war is acted out as quote, friendly competition. The word slavery isn't mentioned at any point during the show. In this club Shema and One through the experience of attending the event. Okay so basically! Warn you walk into the, arena. It's huge I wouldn't say it's a football field I would say it's like an Olympic size pool like with arena seats all around. It's like going to the Rodeo. Basically. It's like going to the Rodeo. It's like a ton of der- in the center of this massive oval. How many seats wasn't again? It was one thousand. Dolly Parton. And the whole conceit of this situation. Besides eating a tremendous amount of food, I mean a full chicken and pork line and some soup that has a lot of cream and a biscuit. It was a lot of food decides that. Blue quickly. find out your competition a friendly competition between neighbors. Five folks. Are. For. The whole arena is split in half on one side. You've got the north wind on the other side. And, the announcer who rides in on this horse on his steed. They just. He encourages each side to jeer at the other. Side fireworks. He asked you to kind of jeer at them. And then he goes to the South side and he tells us outside. Northern. Third. Foul smelling. Slobber all gas. Good here, way out of a wet paper bag there. Before we get started. You may hear a few names that you don't recognize. There's Aisha Harris who wrote a critical profile of the stampede after which Dolly removed the word Dixie from the events name. By the way we have put a link to that story in our show notes for this episode. There is also Dolly's nephew. Brian seaver as a kid Brian was talented break dancer, who sometimes performed onstage with Dolly he gives Shima and Jad a tour of Dolly's child home. In Tennessee's smokey mountains, Sarah's marsh is list. Who wrote a book about Dolly? Parton and University of Tennessee, Professor Lynn Sakho taught a class called Dolly Parton America, which is where the series got its name. Okay, let's jump into the interview. We kick things off with Shima revealing how she and Jad prepared for an introductory conversation with Dolly Parton. He comes up to me. This is this is actually kind of fun. He comes up to me. He has a book he like goes into the cabinet behind. My desk gets out a piece of yellow paper painted around up a tape. Sit around the outside of the book and he's like this top secret, but I needed to read this and then. I, need you to prepare me for a conversation with the person now as you know, I've already been researching and doing other things for his talk and other and other ideas that we're kind of cooking up for other series, and so he tells me it's Dolly, and you know so I read. This book is covered in yellow fluorescent paper. Which I think was unnecessary I don't. Don't think anyone cares so I read it I. Write all the questions, and are you writing questions like? Are you knowing okay? We're GONNA do this. Do you have any premise for the show yet? We're like what kinds of questions are you writing down? Just questions pop into your head as you're reading it or this was a very yeah. This is a very moment so this. This is just the introductory conversation. So I also think we just needed to have an introductory conversation you know before you even touch certain things and we were both green, which is the beauty of kind of a jazz reporting is? He's okay with like not knowing anything when he begins which I think. adds to kind of the journey. You go on when you start telling. Telling the story, so the listener is going on the same ride you on which is very, I think emotionally fulfilling so we didn't really know when we started we. We knew enough basics and I brought to him everything I found really interesting. The passages I had compelled questions. We go way went over them edited and he went to interview Dolly and he comes back. I listened to the tape. And you hear this in the third episode of the series where she's like even GonNa. Get a question in because ninety minutes goes by. After his first question, and she just does the Dalai magic

Weekend Edition Sunday
Chief economist: With outlook hazy, economy needs support
"Guest, the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund in the wake of this pandemic, the IMF says the global economic outlook is far worse than previously thought. And recovery will take a lot longer for those living in poor countries. That will mean greater income inequality. More debt and more poverty. Geeta Gopinath is the chief economist for the IMF, and she joins us Now. Welcome to the program. Thank you for having me on your show. And we also have NPR's gyms are Oli, who covers economics will also be asking questions. Good morning to you. Good morning, Geeta Gopinath. You predict a much deeper recession this year and slower recovery in the next. What caused you to revise your April estimates so drastically when two big reasons. One is, If you look at the duration of the Loch towns in the first half of this year, they have bean longer than we anticipated. And the intensity has been greater. And secondly, because we don't have a medical solution, yet we expect to see longer, more persistent social distancing into the second half of this year. You wrote this past week that 75% of countries are reopening. But in the absence of a medical solution, the strength of the recovery is highly uncertain. Did you not know that before, though, was there some belief early on that this was going to be Shorter, considering the fact that the illness was deemed to be serious and global and reach. I think what we certainly expected it was that they would not be a vaccine anytime in 2020 But on the other hand, there was an anticipation that as countries expanded, the healthcare facilities did enough testing. Tracing had enough protective equipment. Then there would be much better prepared to deal with this health crisis. I think as off now we can say that countries are still behind the curve here. Which is why we expect this to be a bumpy ride going forward. I'm going to press you a little bit on the debt that the poor nations they're taking on because we've seen in the past that it literally takes years upon years to get out from underneath that debt, and we really are in a place where there won't be many places to turn to for those poor countries to find help. It is going to be a serious concern for foreign nations who will come out of this crisis with higher levels off debt, and the solution for that will be a multilateral support in the form off. Death relief debt restructuring. Concessional financing concessional aid. I mean, I don't see any other way for these economies to be able to come back up to growth without support from the international community. China is a huge lender, especially to developing economies. How cooperative is China being right now in terms of rescheduling debt? China is a part of this G 20 initiated to provide debt relief on DH, So you know they are working with the international institutions to help in this respect. You know, I suspect much more will be needed and this is from all countries was just from China for the poor nations. Onda also for a much longer period of time than till the end of this year.

Aviation Week's Check 6 Podcast
U.S. Air Force Launches Contest to Replace the B-52 Bomber’s Engine
"Here to talk about bombers. There is news just breaking as of May nineteenth the US Air Force kicked off a three way competition to reengineer. Its entire seventy six aircraft. Be Fifty two fleet and the the competitions going to be underway. They just released a request for proposals. Steve can you talk about what the Air Force is looking for? And what that means for the companies involved. Yes so on Tuesday evening or Tuesday late afternoon the Air Force released the our fee to start Step two of the engine source election the replacement for the Beef at T.F. Thirty Three's which You know design. That goes back about sixty years. And you've got three companies in the competition. Rolls Royce with the VR seventy five. Which for this competition. They're calling the effluent thirty We also have the engine. That's on the global six thousand that The Air Force is flying as as the e eleven As a communications relay. Pratt Whitney is competing with the w eight hundred which is another business jet engine and you've got Ge that has said that they are looking at offering either or both of the CF. Thirty four engine actually started out with the. A ten In still in service with the ten. But it's gone onto power of regional jets and Also it's passport engine. Which is the propulsion system on the bombard? Da Global Seven thousand business jet. So those are the those are the three competitions with air forces looking for is a new propulsion system. That as what what they say is basically the T.F. Thirty-three has kind of come to the end of its life beyond twenty thirty. They don't really see. You're very viable way of sustaining it. And keeping it in service. But of course they've decided that the B fifty two will continue operating beyond twenty fifty so they need something under the wings of those aircraft. Keep them flying and they're looking for something that it can extend the range by twenty five percent that can add a bunch of loiter time to the B fifty two's mission set and They won't cost too much and that they can integrate as quickly as possible. So that's that's where we are with the competition Steve Guy. Can you tell us a little bit of it? Gives us a little more sense of the engines? That will be competing. Hard High State Yeah I it's fascinating to me that this is competition is underway. It's it's really difficult to believe that in the early two thousands that they looked at this in the nineteen seventies even looked. This goes back a long way. Pratt and Whitney originally proposed a you know of the upgrades the T.F. Thirty three which courses based on the original J. Three engine that Pratt went. They developed some back in the in the late. Fifties and early sixties. Rolls Royce of course came really close more recently With an offbeat till Evan Option in the mid. Nineteen nineties with with Boeing as a team So it's been an ongoing thing but that was was four engines to replace AIDS so this is different. Because you've got eight engines. Replace eight engine. So how could that possibly work? So the the reason it can work is that over the last fifty years which is really the length of the of this program The original engine. If it's hard to imagine this but the actual fan amit served Pratt and Whitney engine that the the one that's on the inevitable at thirty three is about fifty inches the inlet itself and yet the bypass ratio. Which is you know the key parameter ready for the performance of this Is Only one point. Four three two one but all of the engines that nabbing pushed through for this replacement here. We are fifty years later. They're all between four point. Two to five point five to one bypass ratio but basically in the same diamonds and that reflects the fact that all those cores of shrunk at in you've got much more efficient fan flow and that so here you are bringing in these twenty-first-century engines however just to clarify that One of those engines at state mentioned. Jeez pushing forward with the CF thirty four DASH sandwiches one option. That engine actually will be this year celebrating. I believe it's twenty eight anniversary so it's it's not a near engine itself. Likud's relative to what it's replacing it still a youngster. Really Oli others estate mentioned on new business jet engines up just a little bit of sort of back of the envelope. Calculation and based on the published data that we've got. It's quite interesting. You look at the actual weight that bear way to each of these engines and do a quick so a calculation it at the moment they the tip thirty three. The ship said of bear engines weighs about thirty five thousand pounds. That's just mean a mechanical gear on on the on the pylon not including the case sings or even sometimes accessories. If you look at the calculated waits for the others the passport which is the other g engine would actually weigh slightly more about thirty six thousand the prod engine the Peterloo eight hundred which state mentioned which is the The J. Six hundred five hundred engine is sly is actually the lowest just under twenty five thousand. Pansy got an interesting calculation going on that but basically they're all within about three inches of each other in terms of inlet diameter all within a few hundred pounds thrust so it's very complicated competition and a very interesting calculus that the Athol is GonNa have to go through.

The $100 MBA Show
Guest Teacher Oli Bridge: How to Build Video Funnels for Your Business
"Dive into the first part of your video. Funnel engine conversion funnels how about using a personalized video respond to a new inquiry on your website rousing just foreign back a regular email. While as we researching the white paper. Last year I found that customers a seventy percent more likely to respond to emails. If the email has a visual of you in it think about it. You'll video that you'll Sunday is proof that you've taken the time for that. Customer and human psychology means a much more likely to reciprocate the effort amherst spongy. How about using videos to get more leads to show for sales demos but dropped personal video in the days of the hours before the meeting will the Denner. They'll see as a real person behind that calendar appointment until much more invested in the process. Meaning they'll be less likely to cancel all how about using video to get leads to attend your weapons just like with sales calls reach out to them personally insisting that impo beforehand means we prime feel comforted eager to show up and support. I'll do this myself. Every weapon run the attendance rates engagement on my weapon is just night and day. Compared to when I was leading ultimate emails you can even use video to follow up maybe off to a trade show meeting or to rekindle a stagnant sales proposal. The crucial fan is by doing things just a little bit differently. I'm putting in just a little bit of extra effort on humanity. You will stand out against the tide of regular emails. That person gets every day and you'll be more likely to come through and get a response. Okay just a little brief signs include here want to explain to you very quickly while this stuff works why. This video worked so well. It's all about this in cool the Activating system. What is this? Sounds WAY IT Personalization in any walk of life is effective largely because of warn shed human physiological mechanism insisting on talking about the retaking activating system. Let's maybe call it the rest for sure. Save a little time. The brass is a network of neurons. Located in your brain stem are good to the bottle. You too much hip in everyday language. Your acts as a gateway deal conscious brain. It filters foundation that you should pay attention to it helps you control the constant flow signals reaching your senses in any given moment. Let's break this down a bit simpler. So when people talk about selective hearing will then really referencing is effect of the rest that is causing you to ignore some of the information being shared with a pad to the other bits. You care about an easy way to understand. This effect is by thinking about what's called the cocktail party effect. It goes something a little bit like this. Imagine you're at a party with dozens of people jumping there by. You'll easily tune out those compensations buzz as soon as someone say something that is of particular interest youth may be name or film you. Just watch your magically tune into that conversation. That's you'll russ were particularly activating system. Activating you'll conscious brain. This is why puzzle is Magden is so much more effective than mass moncton as humans. We all hardwired to respond to it. And you can think of pus nights video as a sort of standard in personalization sation. It taps into customers conscious. Brian and it gets their attention. Okay let's move onto the next pulse. Fuel fifty funnel engine activation funnels his some simple ways. You can use videos to build deep relationships with your existing customers can help out sending a simple thank you video when they buy new product for me. Heroin joy seen countless examples of this bumpy repeat purchase rates by huge margins. Or how about Husni Ni asking for review for your happiest and most engaged customers? Someone's having a great experience if you'll product or you need to do is ask and they'll happily give you that reveal. What about customer said made it to number one on trust pilot in the men's fussing custody by simply asking for reviews Video rather than picking out one of those ultimated post purchase emails Familiar with what about personal requesting a case study from a happy customer Rothen Out Fifty emails a bunch of your customers and crossing fingers and hoping a good case that he can be the law blood if you'll sales process surely worth taking thirty or sixty seconds to record a video the might land really great case study from a customer remember when recording these videos. This is your opportunity to take your customers experience to the next level. I just shown to let them know that they're not just another number in your business so make sure you count him out by name. You've got to do that. Used that name. We just talked about the rough riddick lights rating system. I'm worried about seven potent. Let them know why they support Full business I may be at a puzzle. Touch whether that Spring Newcastle. You'll total into the video showing them something goofy going on in the background. As you're walking the coating your video this has a humanness an openness that deepens the impact of your message using that name and doing cookie things or just being a bit more real and human. That's all about activating doubt raw system and getting access to the brain so just being human with your messages

Mentally Yours
Anxious Man
"Josh Robert Welcome to mental. Your hello thank you for having me so we're GONNA be talking about anxiety today. Quite an in depth I will. When did you first start experiencing anxiety yourself will so in a major way It really started me the morning after. I'VE BEEN TO A PARTY. So sounds quite unlikely. But prior to that I suppose it'd been nervous ish child but I'd never been I'd never had like maybe tiny panic attack so what you would associate with what I would now identifies a panic attack but really for me. It was kind of always completely final. Seemingly fine went to a party wake up the next morning and everything had kind of collapsed. The any idea what triggered that I didn't know I think it's a combination of genetic factors so I think if you poke around my family history. Logunov you'll see a lot of on diagnosed condemns with the Times but sort of mental health problems and then so I think it's probably sort of underlying and then yeah. I was sort of conference of lots of different things out of state in a job that I wasn't particularly joying maybe too long. I wasn't exercising. Tula losing a lot not really sleeping and so I think I was probably already slightly predisposed and then the policy push me. How did yet she actually fail on that morning? You describe it. Yeah I mean it was like waking up into if you seen a movie where they kind of an actor or character wakes up startled and it. It was basically like that. Wake up into a panic attack and like I said had sort of miniature panic attack previously this what must just complete next level in terms of the intensity of it say panic attacks on that different for different people but for me it's like an intensely physical experience stomach knotted breath. You know very short heart pumping going nuts is dilated skinny sweaty clammy hall but called less sort of thing And then accompanying physical. Tara is a very singular mental one. Which is the idea that at some point. Olis' physical stuff with my body is going to become too much and I'm GonNa have a heart attack will will pass out and lots of people very common people. Think of panic attacks when they're in the most being heart attacks and th- reality is thankfully whilst that terrifying No one started a panic attack yet so it was extremely intense and long so usually panic attack could last for thirty seconds minutes when I'd had these little tremors before this one was three or four hours. Oh my goodness yeah. It was really intense and it was sort of. Come maybe it would subside fractionally and then it would you know. Sort of new wave would come would sort of appear see. It was pretty grim. I went to I went obviously went to an e a bunch of times with three different times to the and Went to see two different. Nhs GP's this'll general prognosis and it's not their fault you know then. It just isn't at the moment setup to deal with problems like this but This sort of general prognosis that it was that it was a hangover. Gone wrong And you know the prescription was cup of tea and get a good night's sleep so think promos couldn't sleep so Five days after five days off the initial thing having badly slats and been in a constant state of panic I ended up going to To see a private GP just coughed up the cash and And he very quickly diagnosed me with a generalized anxiety disorder after that initial fairly long. Panic attack then manifest. Yes we moved. It went from being kind of immediate fear about dying to being an mall. Will generalize guess all pervasive fear of pretty much anything say the definition of a Generalized anxiety disorders will obviously worry about forget anything so things like getting fired or getting dumped to Get a whole bunch of really. Would they call sensory motor stuff so I worry about forgetting to breathe or not being able to swallow or being constantly live to the rhythm of blinking and things like that so you have those initial worries and then what you do? Is You worry about those worries. This is slightly difficult concept to grasp. But it's the idea that your normal people might worry about. Not Sleeping Normal. Invited comments people like me. Worry we'll spend our whole lives worrying about not sleeping. Does that make sense? It's like a second order. Almost derivative of the original worry and then the third thing is guilt. Say you find this with people who suffer from anxiety disorders and depressive conditions. And things like that where you look at your life. And what on earth do I have to worry about? And of course the reality is nothing but it's a disease or disease but it's a condition something that exists outside of me and therefore it's not really my fault takes a while to get. How did you deal with everyday life through this? I would say in the in the initial I sort of five days a very badly so I was badly sleeping. I didn't see anyone So I I was couldn't sick to work. Actually that's not true. I did go in occasionally but I would get their run into the Lou after a few minutes. Run into the losing sort of burst into tears. Kind of thing and then make excuses shuffle. It stayed really bad for me for about a year and so after a couple of weeks I started to develop. I don't K- ping mechanisms but ways of seeming fine externally whilst crumbling entirely and so. It's something I talk about quite a lot in the book. Is this idea that you really can be fine. Externally and be disintegrating internally and lots of friends of sets me having read the book. I feel terrible that we didn't know we couldn't spots or didn't realize it was as bad as it was. You know you said you had a problem but it was. It was as bad as it was. And the answer is not not an partly consciously. You're trying to cover covered up because you don't want to be have a problem. You know wants to be problem but also because actually It that's just the nature of it. Is You know. Come for me. At least it's very real duality to it And so yes in your question Obviously a bit of a mess for the first couple of weeks and then after that I think I started to get better. It are the disguising it or living with. When did you decide? You want to shad this sort of writing about intending people about it. I was always really chatty about it and I think that is slow maybe slightly old for particularly blokes to to be open about it in a way. I was lucky it was as bad as as walls because I had to. I didn't have an option. You know when you will spending an hour of every day at work in the lose crying You'll boss get slightly suspicious. You know either. You've got a bowel complaint or a cocaine addiction or something that means you against the latest much and so eventually I had to. I I started talking about it with people and once you've said it once again it's just my experience but once spoken about it once it gets each time you did it gets easier and easier and then. I the writing of the book came. I had been talking to a friend. Who's a journalist so I used to work in advertising and I was talking to a journalist at the same newspaper and he'd had a similar problem to me and he suggested. Oh you should you should write about. This wasn't something I'd really considered but I pitched it to see to the Times newspaper. He published the article and we just had this incredible reaction to it so too. I mean hundreds of messages from people around the world and on the back of that someone else to a book so called anxious man at what you cover on it. We talk about all sorts. So it's kind of rooted in my own experience. I hope that it's funny book. So they're all jake's which isn't necessarily the most obvious is doesn't obviously make a A sort of topic will vector for telling jokes but it is humorous. But it's kind of starting from my own experience. What's it like to live through the moment that I described earlier? Where you wake up to realize that your mind has collapsed. What's it like to experience? full-scale disintegration of the mental faculty And then Haji about getting better and I'm convinced that the things that stop you from having one of these things in the first place are the same things that help you to get better and so. I hope that the book is of course helpful for people who've had this problem was similar problems. But if you haven't their lessons in there hopefully Would be helpful. We also look at interesting thing you know would pick around things like social media. We look at the new cycle and how that affects mental health. Sleep BLUES. Stuff about what? How did he pass me in terms of getting better? So I would say the the kind of anchor in me getting better and there's a number of different stages but primarily for me. It's been a combination of cognitive behavioral therapy Which doesn't what form but for me. It's just been incredible. Changing my relationship with alcohol completely. Say become a complete bowl. Well not a complete at that Aussie things like exercise Say fairly standard stuff I will say maybe in the most when you have a problem. That's as longtime or rather when you have a problem that is immediate is mine was like yours at the start. What was the trigger? You spend a whole lot of time trying to figure out okay. What's the exact thing that caused this problem? And actually I would say one of the key components of my own recovery is accepting the there may not be a particular trigger that this might just be completely random and once you've realized that you can let go of the search for the specific combination of things that make giving you anxiety and start to get better.

Odd Lots
Why The Rise of Passive Investing Might Be Distorting The Market
"Hello and welcome to another episode of the odd lots podcast. I'm Tracy alloway and I'm Joe Weisenthal. So Joe I tweeted something recently early and It provoked a large response on social media. It's weird how that happens right. You tweeted something that provoked a response. I I find it very hard to believe. I know it's outrageous but I was talking about. Have you heard of the fire of movement. Yes vaguely like I am familiar with it. It's has to do with people Retiring early right. Yeah so it's fire as an F. R. E. and it stands for financial independence retire early and the basic idea is you can save a lot of money and if you invest it wisely you can retire at an early age like in your thirties and supposedly it's it can work out for for. Even normal people are people on normal normal salaries. We're not talking about really wealthy people and the thing that I always find really interesting about. It is when you go and read about how people are actually investing investing that money so that they can retire early. They're almost all talking about doing it themselves. And be through passive investments events like. ATS right exactly right. So people think they live frugally. They they work for several years. They live frugally. But but then they sort of have this confidence that historical returns that we've seen in stock and bond markets throughout the world will always be there for them in the future and so they just put a bunch of money in passive. ETF's or you know it passive ish ETF's and then they count on that existing for the rest of their lives and then they do something. I don't know they go on. Read it or tweet for the next from thirty five until that's right and the reason I find. This wasn't so bad to me to be honest I would be. I would do that if I if I had confidence. You can see the going up for sure but the reason I find it so interesting. From a market perspective is to me it hits upon like a number for a very very important themes but really it hits upon this question of whether or not the fire movement can exist without the bull market that we've seen for the last ten years right like it's very easy to say dump all your money in something like You know a vanguard total stock market. ETF and just watch it soar. When that's the thing that's been happening for years and years and years? Well I'll say two things. One is certainly raises. The question about whether this subculture can continue to exist but it also raises another question about people who aren't in that subculture but in a way have defacto in fact he'll bought into because this mantra that we've gotten from Sort of the media and fund management industry is okay. Most people aren't saying you should try to retire at thirty five or forty but this idea never try to time. The market never pick individual stocks. Just have a broad diversified provide basket of ETF that you may be rebalanced every once in a while has become so intense and extreme and everyone's being pushed to invest like that so even if you are one one of the fire people on read it it still raises the question. Of how much is everyone else who is not planning on per se. Retiring early. Essentially bought into Olis' extreme version of the same story absolutely and you'll see a lot of the investment advice set. The fire people talk about is actually very very similar to advice given to people generally generally when it comes to their 401k's and stuff like that passive is supposed to be cheaper. It's supposed to be much better. But what if there's a downside to passive of investing we've spoken about active versus passive on the podcast before but we haven't done that much on how passive investing might actually be changing the the way the market functions. No absolutely and it's such an important question given as we've been talking about how many people have portfolios in which the only action they do is just add to the same basket of three or four. ATF's every single month working lives. It's been fantastic since the crisis with incredible rally in stocks and bonds simultaneously but as they say Past performance no guarantee of future returns. This is true all all right. Well I'm happy to say that we have the perfect person to talk about this today. our guest is Mike Greene. He's the chief strategist and portfolio manager over at Logica a capital investors. Mike thanks for being on. Thank you for having me so I guess my first question is. How did you get interested in at this? Particular area examining the impact of passive investing on the broader market. Is that something that you are observing in your sort of day job. Well the way I think of my day job is to really try to understand the market structure. I'm not a traitor in the traditional sense wasn't trained on a prop desk or anything else and so you know I've always managed to make money by trying to figure out. Actually what people are being forced to do. What is the incentive structure? That's causing people to do what I think is fundamentally irrational rather than just saying. Hey they're crazy using stupid and this eventually stop the opportunity to dig in and understand. Actually the incentive structures that have been created the restraint requirements requirements for people to engage in certain transactions whether it's from a regulatory framework or whether that's from a an institutional framework basically built into their Prospectus this ultimately that can create the opportunity to identify trades that you think are irrational and have the potential to break as that behavior is brought to its logical extreme. That's how I stumbled onto this stuff. So what are in your view. The big structural trends or the big structural impositions on individual investors or pension refund or any other entity. That has a lot of money that are all causing people to sort of invest in the same way right now one of the big the key ideas here. So there's a couple of Keith. Things the first is is that the growth of passive investing has has been well documented right and the narrative behind the outperformance fundamentally built around the work of of Bill Sharpe. who was the father of of the sharp ratio The cap M Formula Etcetera His paper in Nineteen ninety-one called the arithmetic of active management management. Is this analysis that we've all heard that says fundamentally passive investors by definition are only matching the active investors in terms of their overall allocation. And so the difference is just GonNa it'd be fees which means that the active managers underperform. Everyone accepts this Today because we've seen the evidence of the outperformance of passive but very few people take time to go back and actually look at the construction of the problem. The assumptions that existed under that the assumptions are just absurd right so in in the definition of what a passive investor is according to Bill. Sharpe is that pass. Investors hold all the securities on the market. How do they get in? That's magic out of the get out. That's also magic. They never transact right the minute they transact they ceased to be passive investors and as we know passing vehicles or feeling with billions and billions of dollars of inflows on a daily and weekly basis there in the market transacting. They are the single largest trans actors actors. By far and as a result they have to be influencing the market they cannot be passive the fundamental premise on which this whole idea is built is flawed right. The second thing that has happened though is because passive investing has grown so large and so powerful. The resources to engage in lobbying efforts to institutionalize passive within the framework has expanded dramatically. Most people have a cursory familiarity with things like 401k plans. IRA's vast majority of Americans have some exposure go through their employer to these plans. Those rules have changed over the years. Through the lobbying efforts of passive players vanguard and Blackrock to inculcate passive of strategies into these vehicles under the premise that this is the best possible vehicle for the vast majority of Americans to invest in and it had the effect of creating this crowding crowding that is further accelerated the performance of the benchmarks that these are ultimately tied to Oman. Sorry there's so much just in the first a couple of minutes That I find really really fascinating. Oh why don't we go back to the first point. which is this idea that? When we're evaluating the performance silence of passive versus active where not actually taking into account the way that passive can influence the market? So how are you seeing passive investing actually impact the market. Now we're seeing it in a couple of different ways right One is that we're seeing a distinct performance advantage that is being created for those securities that are in indices that are being invested into by passive investors. This is fairly well studied phenomenon in terms of the dynamic. What's called index inclusion? So we have one off events in which we can look at securities that have been put into an index or have been injected from a widely traded index. And we see either. There is a distinct and permanent shift in the valuation the price levels associated with those securities. Mrs Well Documented Academic Literature with the literature editor has not studied is the dynamic of the continued inclusion the continued flow of capital and that becomes a harder problem because suddenly they're on par with all of the other constituents students in the index and they're all experiencing it all right so I I gave a speech several years ago in which I compared it to the David Foster Wallace. This is water right. The medium him in which we're actually participating as being skewed by the behavior of these passive flows.

All Things Considered
Vatican Opens Door to Limited Ordination of Married Men as Priests
"Meeting of Roman Catholic bishops from Brazil and nearby. Countries could prove historic the Vatican today gave the bishop's permission to discuss whether married men in the Amazon region might join the priesthood here's NPR's Tom gjelten all that happened today. Is that the Vatican said the agenda for the bishop's meeting in the fall can? Include discussion of whether some married men in an emergency conservative priests the bishops still have to debate the question at pope Francis would have to approve any change in the church's celibacy requirement. But just allowing the bishops to discuss it is shift from the previous attitude in Rome would crack down on any Bishop, any major figure in the church who dared to say the preschool possibly get married. Rocco Pomo is editor of the website whispers in the lodge. He is speaking via Skype here, you have Vatican document, basically saying, green light, you can talk about the reason being, there's a critical shortage of priests in the region, only about one for every ten thousand Catholics bishops in the region for years of said, something has to be done to reach more people Paul says Catholics who care for the salvation of souls, should be concerned about the plight of people living in these remote areas. They can't have a priest for weeks or months, which if they can't appraise that means they can have. Mass. They can't have Nash. They can't have Eucharist. Holy communion. The thing the Catholics considered to be the bread of life. If thing that keeps us alive. Spiritually some Catholic activists have advocated an end to celebrate in and the Catholic priesthood but John Gehring the Catholic program director at the faith in public life organization, says this situation is unrelated to that push coming, some, the church needs of the region affects on the ground on Amazon saying, this is an urgent crisis, and we need to rethink in this particular context. How we respond to it. I mean, this is not an advocacy group saying, let's push this agenda. Another point this would not be the first time. There'd be married priests. Some married clergy have left the Anglican church and joined the Catholic priesthood with their wives. That was approved. Nearly forty years ago by Pope John Paul the second and reaffirm by Pope Benedict. Still allowing married priests in the Amazon region because of an emergency there. Could set a precedent. Massimo fudgy, Oli theologian at Villanova university notes that priest shortages are developing in other places as well. Which means that every church in the world can request this Europe, America Africa Asia. So that could be the beginning of a general overhaul of the Catholic church is dealing with telly. A final point for hundreds of years in the early church priests were allowed to marry celibacy in the priesthood is what Catholics call a discipline, not a doctrine Tom gjelten, NPR news.

Journey to $100 Million
The $100 Million Dollar Mistake
"Is you have. But I bet it was not a one hundred million dollar mistake. Several weeks ago when we were thinking about going to a hundred million dollars, and we had just kind of announce it to the world. And maybe even after a couple of podcast episode, come Allah. We were like, yeah, we're going to do it one hundred million dollars. I thought well what's gonna actually take to get two hundred million dollars? Like how much do we have to sell? How fast we have to grow? We're going to try to do this by twenty thirty. What does it really mean? As far as growth are we talking about tripling the size of the company every single year doubling the size? And so what I do. I sat down and I created a complex spreadsheet. And in the spreadsheet, I said well at the time where it will million dollars a little bit more now, but then it was one million dollars, and we had to get to one hundred million dollars, and we had eleven years, and I brought that up in two months SO, I figured well. If we increase by this much every single month, and since this recurring revenue issued add on top of itself. So let's say we bring say a thousand dollars in the first month will and the second month we bring in thousand dollars again now up to two thousand dollars the third month we bring in one thousand dollars third time. Now, we have total of three thousand dollars. There's a cumulative effect over time, and we had eleven years times twelve months, and that's too much math for me to do right now. I don't know hundred thirty two that's close. If that, correct. So we had a hundred and thirty two months to actually build up this revenue. So I laid out this big spreadsheet and. And I did that we needed to bring an extra twenty six hundred dollars in new monthly recurring revenue every single week in order to achieve a hundred million dollars at the end of that time period, and I actually publish that information. I think I did a podcast episode about it. And I was very proud of myself or calculating that. A some point. I went back, and I looked at it. And I started to kind of question the logic. And I realized I had made a mistake. I had made a big mistake. What I was doing was always adding up all of the money that we would have earned between then and twenty thirty so summing it all up equal one hundred million dollars. That's a lot different than earning. One hundred million dollars in your twenty thirty which is really the goal. The goal is not to earn one hundred million dollars in the next eleven or twelve years. Then there's a big difference. Matter of fact, in order to earn a hundred million dollars over the next eleven years. What that means is into thirty will be an eighteen million dollar company. So think about it this way say like a million dollars in two thousand eighteen two million two thousand nineteen four million two. Thousand twenty cetera Oli up to twenty thirty eighteen million dollars. When you add all that up for every single year. That was one hundred million dollars was the answer. I got and it was wrong. It was a big hundred million dollar mistake. When I realized that and recalculated the numbers were huge. It was something like there was so big that even save the file it was like fifty five thousand dollars a week in revenue or maybe per month. It was a big big way bigger number than we could achieve saw realize that model was wrong. I had made a huge mistake would also realize that is going to be very difficult for us to grow by having a linear amount of new revenue coming in every single week or month. The reality is there's going to be stacking affect if we bring in twenty five hundred dollars per week in new month recurring revenue which is about what we're doing right now that won't be acceptable in five years in five years, and he's be ten or fifteen or twenty thousand a week. The numbers all the numbers are going to get bigger, including how much we bring in. There's also going to be an inorganic component buying companies and foreign them into digital. This is way more complicated of a situation than I originally suspected. It's not gonna be just bringing the same on of money every single week for the next eleven years way, more complicated. I made a huge mistake. I don't know what the answer is yet. But I know that it's not a steady stream of income is going to vary over the years. Thank you for listening. I hope you heard something you can implement in your

Gary and Shannon
Rami Malek is a 'legend' in new trailer for Freddie Mercury biopic 'Bohemian Rhapsody'
"What better way to prove that then Chewing on the women's knows and swallowing the tissue today's national emoji day everybody get out your phones and start, doing, things with little words that you can't. Express we are self both the classic smiley face with hearts for is and the thumbs up we're tied for, first place from Maryland Oregon up to seven states love on the smiley face with hearts. Fries, and the thumbs up did well in other states like Maine Vermont an emoji simple straight to the. Point but California's top emoji the one most used by people, in the state of California along with Pennsylvania is the they call it, the blessed emoji, which is sort of the hands up and little mistake no not praying hands It's not like that. It's like this the hands up altogether like you're like you're playing football but all your fingers are that's the, most popular one is what it says I've never used that one guest where guess what. Nevada's, favorite emoji is Poop poop emoji with the ice Yup On the, baseball seeing this story. Is trending. Locally the buzz surrounding Orioles infielder Manny Machado is at an all time high because. There are a couple of different places. Bob Nightingale had tweeted out this morning he expects that Machado will be. Traded to your Los Angeles Dodgers tomorrow he's like. The, Manny Ramirez of two thousand eighteen yeah but this guy actually has some future ahead of him and I don't think. Manny Ramirez head. That going for. Him he's he's young he's he's great he's in the middle of, a career year batting three eighty five. Twenty four home runs. Ninety six games the Orioles, are. Horrible horrible or Orioles are horrible horrible and. That's why they're trying to unload. Them he's got a huge contract though so the dodgers are going to try to stay out. Of the salary cap if they can and have you seen? The latest Queen trailer bohemian rhapsody trailer I'm gonna play a little bit of. This Enjoyed the show I also saw Lisa it? Is quick and then you need someone you Remmy Malik there. As as Freddie Mercury and the teeth Oli cow the teeth, in that video are incredible so we're. Gonna throw, the latest trailer for, bohemian bohemian rhapsody this is what they call official trailer. Number one. There will, be, more but he in that just in the trailers looks amazing all right coming back, swamp watch all, of what's going on in Washington DC big announcement from. The president today just some comments but a big comment about his reaction to. The reaction what, happened in Helsinki in his meeting with Vladimir. Putin will play those comments, we come back Amy king has an update on the news President Trump says he misspoke. And that he accepts the conclusions of. US intelligence agencies that Russia, meddled in the election you've just heard. Gary talking about that, but the president also says there was no collusion I have faith in our intelligence agencies also told reporters. At the White House this afternoon the US Russia relationship has gotten substantially better news brought to you by eight hundred no. Cup here's a been proposed. That would say a child cannot be treated as a. Criminal if he or she is under twelve years old instead of putting the child in the juvenile Justice system the kid would be. Veered toward gentler service agencies for help with questionable behavior supporters, the Bill say children under twelve are. Too young, to enter the Justice, system those kids who commit more serious crimes like murder. Would be. Sent through, juvenile, delinquency court a federal appeals court says a former inmates should be allowed to sue, county and the, sheriff's department for alleged mistreatment the woman claims she was. Shackled to a cell door for hours while wearing very little clothing without access. To food water, or a toilet a woman has been arrested. For a hit and run, crash in San Bernardino that killed a woman and her unborn baby the driver was arrested. Yesterday the woman who died last week. Was in a crosswalk she, had almost finished crossing The street when she was hit a climber is fallen to his. Death on a, peak in king kings Canyon National Park in central California the. National park service's officials got an SOS from a satellite device last Thursday one hiker was..

Art of Self Evolution
Anything next for you just keep working on the model. Obviously may be hoping that means that can get
"Your of book. food If people and you purchase know, my your book prepared does stop support and nonprofit. I let them. Make welcome Oli. Organizations? I them Yes. try The funds potato go chips to nonprofit that are made with coconut one oil. hundred percent. I let I don't them even try take a yogurt salary from and add it at all goes to fruit the kids, that they pick. So I try to make but a buffet it's and my honestly goal is have just that they would goosebumps. try it. Enjoy And now the this whole kids that have conversation. been there longer will A say, really, oh, really she's encouraged so cool. listeners You gotta come to see, listen you to can this. do this Mandy school. She just wants you to try it. Do And you see? that's I've a very got basic a lot going on. goal So I almost hate that asking I just this question feel is the that only where way I can do be you successful see it going? and by You know, them why trying should I ask it you for more when you're in, already they'll be doing open so much, to try and something but I'm just else sort of in wondering, eventually you know they'll be anything more open to next eating for these you foods just because I give keep them the working education on along the model. with the food Obviously is to why may it's be so important. hoping that that means that can get It's, out yeah, to the I world love and that other you're doing this. You're other foster odyssey homes in correlating that respect. to different Yes, diseases I always that we have have out big there. dreams. And And as you're saying if you shoot such for the an onset of moon, child childhood shoot for the stars, diseases, you get sir, the finding in, whichever every day direction new, even that is from I, I read I'm a little shooting. bit about They're your work, always. you know an autism So ultimately, to come disease, I'll Astra tell you stuff, my goal and obviously is to have you've mentioned a big block the cancer of land also, where a have a little market but I love where people that can you're mentioning come and have when a little you had cafe your first foster son where they that can you. Could change his taste buy buds in the two things weeks. that they So this just try can get it from local can farmers become this absolute and pick up biochemical good foods changes. in Seems a like nutrient you're saying dense right, foods absolutely, with absolutely. the farmers that are doing And that's it in mindfully the thing earth, that's friendly so exciting and to me. And friendly to the I animals thought for those that that eat meat. when I had And then I have a little fostered cafe ten where people children can through pick up my food home, to eat, I've adopted and one then on the. The same premises. a try I wanna to have a all big of them, home but that has you know, I'd a have a child foster or to home come through my home, and and an then they elderly would go back home out together, comeback through my home an and elderly go back assisted out home because the system where tries you meet to that gap reunify of the elderly them, in the child. And I and think that that emotional it just makes will it close very tumultuous it in where we life have for car the child. proctors What in honestly minded, and what happened to medical when doctors I noticed on the a premises pattern that every two and weeks, it just would take wanna about change. two weeks I wanna of dealing do it in. with I want to really show how bad to do behavior it because I have the vision. and I just know keep it works presenting food and in keep presenting a haven't seen in two it done weeks. yet, I would but change I'm gonna your taste do it buds into. enough to That's where they my would long eat term it. goal of a They gathering would even place if they for ate people a bite or two. in home And then for in two these months, kids you and could these really elderly notice to kind a behavioral of help each other change in the GAC so of much life. to where you could, you You know, go wanna out do to it. eat I say, or go you to are a public doing place it. entrusted. I also The child think you're wouldn't a superhero. go crazy What on are you. you? Sure And so you're I superhuman. thought. That was so special about my Your home. vision is huge, And but then thank I found you out for when I started really, working with the really orhpanages acting is the on same it exact showing protocol some good results. I agree even with you. even I though I think can't it's control an area all that has of fallen the foods through that the they gaps. get, you know, So it thank you still for not just bringing has the awareness, same but tangible timing evidence still has and the same results. effect. I, when It's I pretty, sure listeners it's know pretty how to get inspiring a hold of you. to To get watch a hold it of happen. your book. So And there it is, what's you know, the best they're way for people to five, follow I you love that you you've or been able your to, website, or obviously even social media you got or something the laboratory your life as at laboratory, my your book home, is on Amazon your real mission food statement, recovery but getting into is this the orphanage name of the in book having Mandy a blame little bit of in a laboratory than I have not to, you know, Mandy blame enroll, depersonalize played recovery, it Oliver in any way, Instagram, but just Twitter, that you're able to have and results face back over and over which and of course, just, then you brings know, anytime that data anybody in that wants model to get on the air element, and just learn doesn't it, you how to know, get healthier. I make and it super you're able simple to ensure and make you think of others, food in a different way. look, this You've never is a thought sort of of it timeframe before you're looking at Unicenter and follow you know anybody this, who these have concepts donate buttons of system, on my website and here's in the types the of book results just are doesn't going to be app. getting I wanted to be able in to give an what exchange. type of time. I mean, I'm it's huge. for And your then donation look than I at can the help time out the kids we're talking so you can find it anywhere weeks on in. Months. the internet. This is not years. Thank you so I'm much in I'm, for the listeners I'm Mendis offering. lasting spent a I'm spell, really I. excuse me. I think B. I need to come. l. I u. I think you m. need to e. adopt so me Mandy man. bloom and I might. lucre I might up need a couple of weeks in fell your home. over. 'cause and No, Mandy, I honestly, really with appreciate all your business, until I it can't kind thank of brings you me enough to for another taking question time to because be with I think us about today. Absolutely. growing up. Thank Maybe you. we Join were our all protect asks your time. to try things Absolutely. that we didn't Thank want you. to try. And thank you listeners for When tuning I was younger. into I art was of born self and evolution, raised in the UK and it a was show a little bit of to travel encourage and inspire through Europe. people It to was flee available to vol's. us in If that meant you different know foods, anyone Nassar's who like to definite, share their really story loved on that. the show, My mom said, please just have him try contact it. So me at I, Joel I Muir love that dot that's your concept, com. but Thanks again. I think about that

24 Hour News
Kevin Harvick, Brian Mcmillan and Mcdonald discussed on 24 Hour News
"The chevy teams don't appear to a figured out what their new camaros need martin true ex junior has six straight top tens in fort worth over three hundred and fifty laps led kevin harvick won the fall race and if you haven't been counting he's already won three times this year i'm brian mcmillan i don't have nearly enough time to list all the tasty ways you can enjoy chicken at mcdonald's bad i'll give it a go the always made a full chicken mcnuggets made with all meat chicken for the scenery buttermilk crispy tenders better to perfection or all the familiar and exotic flavors of senator crafted recipes including the new garlic white cheddar chicken sandwich with grilled or crispy chicken drizzled with creamy garlic a oli short here but you have time on your side so go and savor every bite of your chicken donalds chicken how you like it at participating mcdonald's a team of german scientists has harvested their first crop of vegetables grown without earth daylight or pesticides researches at new mayor station three in antarctica harvested the crops as part of a project designed to help astronauts cultivate fresh food on other planets so far they've picked three point six kilograms of salad greens eighteen cucumbers and seventy radishes grown inside a high tech greenhouse as temperatures outside drop below minus twenty degrees celsius the german aerospace centre dl which coordinates the projects said thursday that by may scientists hope to harvest four to five kilograms of fruits and vegetables a week while nasa has successfully grown greens on the international space station deal says the arctic project aims to produce a wider range of vegetables that might one day be grown mas or on the moon when a collection of papers from the godfather author mario puzo has been donated to dartmouth college that collection comes from one of its former students current illinois governor bruce rounder the new hampshire school says in a news release it was an offer they couldn't refuse echoing one of the movies famous lines the fifty boxes of papers will be housed at the colleges rounder special collections library they include draft manuscripts correspondence and other records from the.